ArXiv TLDR

Seasonal Insolation Variability on Early Venus: Implications for Energy Budget

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2605.11089

Stephen R. Kane

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

This paper explores early Venus's insolation variability, finding that orbital parameters redistribute energy but atmospheric opacity remains the dominant climate driver.

Key contributions

  • Generated latitude-orbital phase maps of solar flux for early and modern Venus under various orbital states.
  • Applied 0-D and 1-D energy-balance models to link orbital forcing to surface energy balance and thermal response.
  • Showed early Venus's insolation variations primarily redistribute energy, with atmospheric opacity dominating surface temperature.
  • Provided boundary conditions for future 3-D climate simulations, including scenarios for temperate early Venus.

Why it matters

Understanding early Venus's climate is crucial for planetary habitability studies. This work clarifies the role of orbital dynamics versus atmospheric composition in shaping Venus's extreme climate, providing essential data for future advanced climate models. It helps assess if early Venus could have sustained temperate conditions.

Original Abstract

Venus and Earth are similar in bulk properties yet followed dramatically different climatic trajectories. Reconstructing Venus's climate evolution requires understanding how rotation, obliquity, eccentricity, and solar luminosity shaped incident energy and the atmospheric response. Here we present latitude-orbital phase maps of incident solar flux for Venus at the present epoch and at an age of 0.5 Gyr, when the Sun was fainter and Venus may have occupied a different dynamical state. We explore slow- and fast-rotator regimes, moderate obliquity (10deg), and elevated eccentricity (e=0.15-0.30), motivated by dynamical studies of plausible limits. To translate flux maps into climate-relevant quantities, we apply an idealized atmospheric energy-balance framework with global (0-D) and latitude-dependent (1-D) formulations calibrated to modern Venus. This framework defines a radiative relaxation timescale that links forcing variability to thermal response. The resulting diagnostics connect orbital forcing to surface energy balance and assess seasonal and orbital variability relative to Venus's extreme greenhouse state. Our results show that early Venus could experience substantial redistribution of insolation across latitude and orbital phase, but orbit-averaged incident flux varies only modestly across the explored parameter space, leaving atmospheric opacity as the dominant control on surface temperature. Insolation variations therefore act mainly as modulators rather than primary drivers of climate state, with their expression governed by the competition between forcing and radiative adjustment timescales. The insolation maps and response diagnostics provide boundary conditions for future 3-D climate simulations of early Venus, including regimes in which temperate surface conditions may have been sustained.

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